They also won the World Citizenship category prize of $6000, producing the app "with the greatest potential to make a positive contribution to the betterment of humanity".
The team of winning students was Daniel Xu, Jacky Zhen, Ming Cheuk and Muthu Chidambaram who will travel to St Petersburg in Russia in July to represent New Zealand in the global Imagine Cup finals.
Winners of the Games category were The University of Auckland's QuakeTown team with the best game app built on a Microsoft platform. Team members were Tobias Sveaas and Zain Ali from The University of Auckland, (and Jason Lau from AUT). They took the first place prize of $6000 for QuakeTown - a drag-and-drop construction game for Windows 8/Windows Phone 8 devices.
In this app, players create earthquake-resistant structures using a variety of real-world materials, meeting certain design goals, material and cost limitations. Once the structure is designed, the player shakes the device (or uses the keyboard for non-accelerometer devices) to simulate an earthquake of a given magnitude and see how their structure holds up using realistic physics calculations.
Second in the same category was The University of Auckland team '2150AD' (Ada Shou and Ray Jiang), who took the $2,000 prize for 2150 AD - a top-down space-shooter game with varied mission objectives, enemy behaviour and upgrade paths. The game is already available in the Windows Phone Marketplace where it has received high ratings and a large number of downloads.
The 2013 Imagine Cup attracted entries from 549 students across New Zealand this year with 100 selected for interviews and 24 teams made the semi-final round of judging by a panel of Microsoft and industry volunteer judges at The University of Auckland on the weekend.